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Category: Book Writin'Monday Jun 04, 2007
Raise a Glass to Anna David's Party Girl
Anna David reads from Party Girl at Book Soup in L.A. on Friday, June 8th from 7-9 pm. See below for details (hint: there will be booze). It's a big day for instructor and friend of the 'bistro Anna David, who recently stirred the soup with a NYT Modern Love column. Her first novel, Party Girl, has arrived. We checked in with her about writing, partying, and writing about partying. What was the inspiration for your book? When I got sober a little over six years ago, my first job was working for Premiere magazine, doing a column called "Party Girl." It was ironic, of course, that I'd been a party girl my entire life and no one had ever asked me to write a column by that name, and as soon as I realized I had an actual problem and put the substances down, I was essentially given this moniker. While that column covered premieres and award shows and was essentially just a different way to quote celebrities, it occurred to me years later that a great set-up for a story would be for a newly sober alcoholic to be given a column where she has to document her risqué adventures and thus have to create a persona based on who she used to be. I'd read all the memoirs about alcoholism and drug addiction -- and absolutely loved a few of them -- but I felt like a novel, where I could create a character similar to how I was pre-sobriety, and then make fun of myself and how delusional my thinking used to be, was a better approach to take. Friday Jun 01, 2007
Edit What You Love
We've had at least two panel discussions in the last five years about what it takes to put anthologies together. As a moderator, I've noticed all successful anthologies share one component: a passionate editor who has a deep connection to the book's topic. Jessica Berger Gross had that special connection topic with the subject of the anthology she edited, About What Was Lost: Twenty Writers on Miscarriage, Healing, and Hope (Plume). The book features contributions from writers like Pam Houston, Joyce Maynard, and Caroline Leavitt. "When my first pregnancy ended in a miscarriage," says Jessica, "I was shattered by feelings of loss. Although as many as one in four pregnancies ends in miscarriage, this is something many women didn't talk openly about. Pregnancy books tend to ignore the topic. I began writing about my experience and an essay turned into an idea for an anthology. About What Was Lost is the book I wanted to find in the bookstore after my miscarriage." About the editing process, Jessica says, "It was important for me to respect the deeply personal nature of these pieces when offering my editorial feedback to my contributors. In the end, I became close with many of them because of the intimate nature of the anthology." Part of her understanding on how to deal with writers comes from her experience on the other side of the desk. She's contributed essays to the anthologies It's a Girl: Women Writers on Raising Daughters, edited by Andrea Buchanan, and Why I Stopped Speaking to My Parents, forthcoming from Rebecca Walker. Jessica credits a 2003 Boot Camp journalism class with some of her success. "Before Boot Camp, I had written for several publications," says the contributor to Salon and Yoga Journal, among others. "[Instructor] Lew Harris helped me improve the quality of my queries and become more confident in communicating with magazine editors." If you're in New York, you can catch a reading from Jessica's book on June 12 at McNally Robinson. Details are here. Taffy Brodesser-Akner, Director of Community Development. Wednesday May 09, 2007
Web Site Success Affords Blogger Book Deal
RELATED: Monday May 07, 2007
Book Your Ticket To The Bigtime At BEA
RELATED: Friday Dec 29, 2006
Secrets of the Book Publicist TradeFrom the Society of Midland Authors Newsletter: publicity tips from Tom Ciesielka:
More advice here. Thursday Dec 28, 2006
My Book for DummiesWhat's it like when a reading group guide is written up for your book? Katharine Weber recounts her experience on Salon. The Publishing Industry is Officially on VacationFor those of you with manuscripts out with your agents or editors, according to the Rejecter, you won't be hearing back until the second or third week in January. Sorry. Vid Lit - the newest marketing tool for authors
Hey authors, before you sign that book deal, make sure to ask your publisher if their marketing plan includes doing a book video. Also called Vid Lit, it should be no surprise that with YouTube being the freshest site out there, book videos are catching on. "Vid Lit." Can you say it without squirming? Me either. But guess what--you new authors out there should probably look into it. (Via The Written Road). In Defense Of Big Dumb DealsI think we can all agree, stupid people are everywhere. Even in publishing. Especially in publishing! And nothing makes putative authors' blood boil more than hearing about a six-figure deal based on a gimmick, a movie, a (god forbid) blog, or something else that doesn't smack of years and years workshop-attending, literary-magazine courting, and MFA-garnering. What are these publishers thinking, doling out (comparatively) measly advances to mid-career writers who've spent years honing their craft and then shelling out the big bucks to whatever corporation is putting together BoratSecret? (from Unsolicited at Gawker). Wednesday Dec 27, 2006
Pick Me
Read her advice here. PreviouslyMusings on the Perfect Query Letter How To Keep Your New Book From Sinking Without a Ripple Everything I Needed To Know About Office Parties, I Learned In High School Book Keeping: 'Proposal Picked Up In The First Week' Advice from Agents and Editors on the Web NPR Helps You With Your Writers Block You Could Be A Published Author Advice Roundup From Agents and Editors Just Because There are Only a Few Days Left in NaNoWriMo Doesn't Mean It's Too Late to Quit! Two From Writers Digest on Time Management Should I work on my book without getting paid? Book Keeping: Six-Figure Advance for 'Living the Story' Panel Transcript: From Journo to Big Book Although Your Work Sounds Intriguing Update on That Thing I Just Posted You Make Unsolicited's Good Eye Cry What is With the Crabby Editors and Agents? If You Were Encyclopedia Brown, You'd Be Happy to Let John Warner Write Your Book Miss Snarks' Best Snarks of the Week Unsolicited: Some Gentle Advice for Editors Not Ready for Publication (or the Light of Day) How to Write Your Novel While You're On the Clock Book Keeping: Novel Drives Demand for Author Novel Ways to Promote Your Novel The Crushing Experience of Publishing a Book Are You Cut Out to Be a Novelist? No Need to Feel Bad About Your Measly Four-Figure Advance Miss Snark's Snarkiest Snarks of the Week Writing Series Fiction for Children What If The Agent Asks For A Full? The Zoo* Returns: Spat With My Muse How To Cheat At The Publishing Game...And Win Writing the Romance Novel Love Scene Book Proposals Aren't Just For How-To Books Anymore Book Keeping: Shari Goldhagen, Family and Other Accidents Interview with Alexandra Cooper When and Why Authors Self-Publish A Kossack's Guide to Book Publishing How Many Friends Does Your Book Have? POD Files Held Hostage for $1500? Apples And Oranges: Adapting Your Novel, by Rob Loughran Ride Out the Ups and Downs of Publicity How to Schmooze With Publishers How to Write a Great Non-Fiction Book Proposal Is Your Cover Designer Really a Cover Designer? It's Such a Fine Line Between Stupid and Clever What is POD - Print on Demand? Why Can't Editors Be More Personal With Their Rejections? The World's Tallest Midget. Part I The Wild and Wooly Story of L'Abeille Publishing |
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